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An empirical analysis of trends in psychology.
117
Citations
15
References
1999
Year
Social PsychologyEducational PsychologyScientific PsychologyEducationStructural BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyQuantitative PsychologyCognitive DevelopmentPsychological EvaluationScientific ProminenceCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesEmpirical AnalysisSchool PsychologyCognitive StudyPsychodynamicExperimental PsychologyPsychopathologyCognitive Psychology
The present research examined trends in the prominence of 4 widely recognized schools in scientific psychology: psychoanalysis, behaviorism, cognitive psychology, and neuroscience. The results, which replicated across 3 measures of prominence, showed the following trends: (a) psychoanalytic research has been virtually ignored by mainstream scientific psychology over the past several decades; (b) behavioral psychology has declined in prominence and gave way to the ascension of cognitive psychology during the 1970s; (c) cognitive psychology has sustained a steady upward trajectory and continues to be the most prominent school; and (d) neuroscience has seen only a modest increase in prominence in mainstream psychology, despite evidence for its conspicuous growth in general. The authors use these findings as a springboard for discussing different views of scientific prominence and conclude that psychologists should evaluate trends in the field empirically, not intuitively.
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